slyc_willie
Captain Crash
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2006
- Posts
- 17,732
I'm pretty sure I have this basically right, but having never run into such a case in my earlier career, I figured I'd ask for clarification from the varied backgrounds here.
Let's say I have a case in which two people planned and carried out a murder. The weapon used was a handgun, which they have both fired repeatedly. The weapon therefore has both their fingerprints on it, while they both have gunpowder residue on their hands when they are arrested.
Questioned separately, each claims the other committed the murder. It then becomes practically impossible to try either one for the crime, because the only piece of evidence implicates them both but cannot definitively prove one did it over the other.
Am I right?
Let's say I have a case in which two people planned and carried out a murder. The weapon used was a handgun, which they have both fired repeatedly. The weapon therefore has both their fingerprints on it, while they both have gunpowder residue on their hands when they are arrested.
Questioned separately, each claims the other committed the murder. It then becomes practically impossible to try either one for the crime, because the only piece of evidence implicates them both but cannot definitively prove one did it over the other.
Am I right?